2 The NewJ-Review, Roseburej,
Dag Is Caught In Crossfire
On US.-Czech Spy Charges
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP)
The United Slates told Commu
nist Czechoslovakia today it has
revoked the diplomatic status of
Mirosla Nacvalac, Czech diplo
mat accused of spying. It said he
now is subject to depoiiction as
an alien illegally in the United
States.
A messenger from the U.S. mis
sion delivered a note to that effect
jto the Czechoslovak mission.
The note declared that under
Boivin Says Time Turmoil
Is Completely Out Of Hand
SALEM (AP) Senate President
Harry Boivin, D-Klamath Falls,
said today the time turmoil in
Oregon is completely out of hand
and a special session of the legis
lature 'might answer the problem.
Boivin said if Gov. Mark Hat
field requested it that he would
poll the members of the Senate
and see what they would do. He
said, however, he was not urging
a special session.
The Senate, he said, could settle
the matter with a minimum of
cost and very quickly possibly in
two days. He said he could not
say what the House of Representa
tives might do.
"I think this thing has gotten
way out of hand beyond what
anyone in state government ex
pected," Boivin said.
Boivin said he would not pre
dict what the Senate would do,
but he felt if anything was to be
done it should be done now and
not after two summers of confused
time.
The legislature passed a bill per
mitting Multnomah and five ad
jacent counties to choose daylight
saving time, which they did. It
also put daylight time on the 1962
general election ballot.
But when the five counties went
on daylight time some other
communities in the state went on
the fast time voluntarily, which
created general time confusion in
I Oregon.
Pep. John R. Dellenback, R
Medford, said he believed that
House members from outlying
areas who voted for the daylight
time in the five-county area might
change their mind at a special
session.
He said that he has had mare
letters and comments from per
sons in the Mcdford area about
daylight time than about anything
Larceny Suspect v
Asks For Hearing
Oscar Harry Gray, ID, Eslaca
da, charged with larceny in an auto,
asked for a preliminary hearing
when he appeared for arraignment
in the District Court of Gerald R.
Hayes Tuesday. The hearing was
set for Thursday. He is accused of
stealing a watch and other items
from a car.
Bobby Milton Myers, 38, of Rose
burg, pleaded innocent to assault
and battery before Judge Hayes.
The charge was brought in a pri
vate complaint by Viola Myers.
His trial has been set by Judge
Hayes for July 19.
Bert McClain, 23, Winston, plead
ed guilty to driving a ear with a
suspended operator's license and
to violation of the basic rule. He
was fined $10 Owith two days sus
pended jail sentence on the sus
pended license charge and 5"'! on
the VBR count.
He told the judge his wife had
caught her hand in a wringer and
he was rushing her to the hospital
when arrested. i
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method for the treatment of
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the following policy is offered
their patients: "After all symp
toms of Hemorrhoids , , . fcsve
subsided and the patient has
been discharged, if he should
ever have a recurrence, ail
Ore. Wed., June 21, 1961
the laws and regulations of the
United States, Nacvalac "may
elect either to depart voluntarily,
or in lieu of such voluntary de
parture, be removed."
This was a warning that if he
resisted Nacvalac would be sub
ject to arrest and forcible depor
tation. The note followed Tuesday
night's U.S.. charges that Nacva
lac was an espionage agent and
that the United States had pic-
else that the legislature did last
session.
Hatfield hinted that had he an
ticipated the confusion that has
resulted he might not have signed
the bill permitting the five-county
Portland area to go on daylight
time.
Hatfield ha said previously he
docs not intend to call a special
session to consider the time ques
tion. He said daylight time outside
the Portland five - county area
clearly is illegal and that any citi
zen can go to court and seek an
injunction to halt it.
Ccpcc, PPL Now
Merged Company
PORTLAND (AP) Merger of
the California-Oregon Power Com
pany into Pacific Power and Light
Company becomes effective today.
Corporate documents were filed
certifying that all necessary au
thorizations had been obtained.
Announcement of the merger
was made jointly by Paul B. Mc
Kee, chairman of the PP&L
board, and A. S. Cummins,
COPCO president. Cummins and
G. Li Jackson, COPCO vice presi
dent, become vice chairmen of the
board of the enlarged company.
PP&L news director James H.
Ferguson said that addition of
COPCO's 93,000 customers would
raise PP&L's utility customers to
411,000. Combined revenues of the
companies were $88 million in
1960.
Stockholders of the companies
gave the proposed merger near
unanimous approval at March 14
meetings.
COPCO will operate as a divi
sion of Pacific Power It Light
using its present staff. COPCO
stockholders will receive. 1.1
shares of PP&L stock for icach
share of COPCO stock.
Minor Accident
Reported Here
A minor two-car accident occur
red Tuesday morning on Highway
99 at the Glcndale Junction. There
were no injuries, and both vehicles
were able to leave the scene un
der their own power.
Driver of a vehicle towing a
trailer, James Crawford Beck, 44
was reportedly attempting a turn
off the highway when the second
vehicle, driven by Raymond Burn
Campbell of National City, Calif.
struck the trailer from the rear.
With Beck were his wife, Mar-
jorie, and children, Virginia, 9,
James, 6, and Robin, 4.
Irma Matlack
Irma Hammond Matlack, 87
resident of 1015 NE Klamath St.,
Roseburg, died Tuesday at her
home.
She was born Feb. 22, 1894, in
Iowa and has lived in this area
for the past 35 years. Her hus
band, Jacob Matlack, preceded her
in death in 1958.
She it survived by two daugh
tcrs, Mis. Mae Buckhaulls of Rose-
burg and Mrs. Grace Wcntworth,
Vancouver, Wash.; one son, Lee,
Canyonvillc; one sister, Mrs. Isa
Mrosko, Canada: two brothers,
Walter and Earl Hammond, both
of Iowa; and eight grandchildren
Private graveside services will
he held at the Roseburg Memorial
Gardens Friday at 11 a.m. with
the Rev. R. W. Knight officiating
Wilson's Chapel of the Roses are
in charge of arrangements.
Called To Fire
The Roseburg Fire Dcpartniant
answered the only fire in Rose
burg Tuesday at 4:25 p.m. at the
FJM Trucking Co. An oil filter
on a pickup truck broke and
caught afire. No damage was re
ported. en absolutely free.'
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no hospitalization and does not
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obligation: The Dean Clinic.
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I Oregon.
tures as proof of his activities.
Dag Uammarskjold, U.N. secre
tary general, was caught in a
cross-fire from the United States
and Czechoslovakia over the spy
charges.
The United States sent Uam
marskjold a note charging that
Nacvalac, handsome 39-year-old
counselor at the Czech U.N. mis
sion, is Prague's chief intelligence
agent in America and that lie
paid an instructor at the U.S.
Army Language chool in Mon
terey, Calif., $1,700 for' informa
tion. The United States said it had
pictures to prove it. The language
instructor, a naturalized Amen
can citizen born in Czechoslovak
ia, confirmed the U.S. account.
The U.S. note declared anew
that the Czech government should
recall Nacvalac at once and de
nied that the demand for his de
parture violated . the agreement
between the United States and the
United Nations giving special
rights to diplomats accredited to
the United Nations.
Nacvalac denied all the U.S.
charges. His delegation indicated
it would press Hammarskjold to
rule that U.S. action against the
counselor violated both the U.N.
charter and the U.S. -U.N. agree
ment. '
The U.S. note said Nacvalac
was known to U.S. authorities as
the "chief of Czechoslovak civil
ian intelligence operations in the
United States and has a long
background in Czechoslovak intel
ligence work."
It charged that Nacvalac had
six meetings with the Army lan
guage instructor, Karcl Hlasny,
between 1958 and 1901, offered an
exit permit from Czechoslovakia
for Hlasny's fiancee in exchange
for intelligence information, and
paid him various sums totaling
$1,700.
The United States said Hlasny
was cooperating with the U. S.
government all the time and the
information he passed was worth
less. Rut Hlasny's fiancee got her
exit permit in 1959 and they were
married in California.
Nacvalac said the U.S. charges
were "all lies" and that he had
never been in California. But U.S.
State Department press officer
Lincoln White displayed photo
graphs of Naclavac and Hlasny
he said were taken outside a San
Francisco restaurant where they
met.
Czechoslovakia's charge that
the U.S. demands violated the
U.N. headquarters agreement
with the United States had
aroused speculation that the
Czechs would request that the
case be teferred to an arbitra
tion tribunal. Clayton Fritchey, a
spokesman for the U.S. delegation
said the arbitration proceedings
can take place only when there
is disagreement between the Unit
ed States and the secretary-general,
and "we know of no such
issue."
Road Contract Awarded
On Yakima Reservation
PORTLAND (AP) A $366,088
road contract award on the Yak
ima Indian Reservation was an
nounced today.
The Portland area office of Ihe
Bureau of Indian Affairs said the
award went to R. E. Hall Con
struction Co., Pendleton. The job
calls for grading and crushed-rock
surfacing of 15Wi miles of the pri
mary road in the mid-central part
of the reservation.
It is the only cast-west road on
the reservation. Planned for the
future is construction of 26 addi
tional miles westward to the res
ervation boundary, north of Mt.
Adams. The road will be of special
importance to Indian timber own
ers. David D. Henry
David D. Henry, 66, of Umpqua
died at a local hospital this morn
ing following a prolonged illness.
He was born at Oakland. Sept.
30, 1894, descendant of a pioneer
family that settled in the Csla
pooia area west of Oakland in the
1860s.
He was married June 8, 1929,
to Hope Thronburg at .Moil ford and
spent his entire life in the Umpqua
area where he engaged in farm
ing. Ho was a veteran at World
War I.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Hope
Henry. Umpqua; a son, Kenneth
L. Henry, Umpqua; a daughter.
Mrs. Don (Patricia) Fickes, Oak
land, three hrulhrs W. IV, Calvin
and James Henry, all of Umpqua;
two sisters. Mrs. Hazel Haines.
I'mpqua, and Mrs. Frankie Moore,
Oakland: and three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held in
the chapel of Long & Orr Mortuary.
Roseburg, Friday at It a.m., with
the Rev. Harvey Timm officiating
Concluding services and vault in
terment will follow in the hose
burg .Memorial GardtMis.
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MR. AND MRS. CHARLES BROWN of Myrtle Creek have
received word from Cots Magazine that their cat Double
Champion Black Trouble has won on All-American Award.
The certificate sent to the Browns named him All Western
Honorable Mention Black Domestic Shorthair. Block
Trouble has been entered in locol cat shows the past two
years, winning Best Domestic Shorthair honors both years.
All Western includes entries from California, Idaho, Ore
gon, Washington and Canada. The All American Awards
are given out by Cot's Magazine to the highest scoring
felines from all the National Cat Fanciers. (Qick Gilman)
Two Eugene Juveniles Wait
Sentence !n Burglary Try
The cases of five young Eugene
people who came to Roseburg and
admittedly attempted to burglarize
a local rural market in the early
morning of June 4 are near an
end.
The store was Model Market No.
2, owned by George Kuhn on Gar
den Valley Rd. at Curry Rd. They
were frightened away by a bur
glar alarm after rutting glass in a
window and were arrested by State
Police in Lane County an hour la
ter when a description of their car
was broadcast.
All Plead Guilty
All have pleaded guilty to grand
jury indictments charging attempt
ed burglary before Circuit Judge
Charles S, Woodrich. Three have
been sentenced and the other two
arc awaiting pre-sentence reports
from the Board of Probation and
Parole before sentence is imposed.
Most seriously penalized was
David Allen Newman, 19, who was
sentenced Tuesday to serve three
years in Uie Oregon State Peni
tentiary. He had a previous con
viction from Coos County. None of
the others have .previous criminal
records, they have stated. .
Kenneth Lee Knight, 20, and
Richard Earl Trantham, 18, are the
Five To Stand Trial
For Criminal Libel
PORTLAND (AP) Five per
sona accused of criminal libel in
connection with last fall's elec
go on trial July 5 in lultnomah
County Circuit Court.
The state contends the five de
fendants wrote and distributed
campaign literature which it says
was libelous. ,
The literature attacked' Monroe
Swcetland, Democratic candidate
for Oregon secretary of state, who
lost to Republican Howell Appling,
Jr.
The defendants are Homer Rog
ers, Mrs. Louise Gronnert, Mrs.
Helen Baldridgc and Henry Dier
ingcr, all of Portland, and the
Rev. Claude Pike, Oregon City.
Jury To Determine Fate
Of Accused Bank Robber
TORTLAND (AP) A federal!
court jury may begin deliberation
today in the case of Lawrence
Gordon Huntley, 26, accused of
bank robbery.
Huntley is on trial in U. S. Dis
trict Court here on a charge of
holding up the Hillsdale Branch
of the Multnomah Bank last Au
gust 1. The robber got awav with
$16,000.
Several hank employes testified i
that Huntley was the map who
held tip the bank. But Huntley tes
tified he was at home at the time
of the robbery.
Warm Weather Seen
In Five-Day Forecast
Douglas County residents are
due for some warm weather the
next five days according to Mr.
Weatherman.
Temperatures are expected to
rise above normal with maxi
mums becoming 82 to 91 by Kri-:
day or Saturday. Fxceptioit will
be Ihe coast area which expects!
temperatures mostly in the 60s !
Minimum temperatures will be 48
to 56. Little or no precipitation is
forecast. I
KRNR On New Schedule
Radio Station KRNR is now on
a 24 hour-basis, according to offi
cials. Starting recently the station has
gone on the around the clo-'k sched
ule, with the Buddy Howard show
from midnight untii 6 a m. It s off
the air only from midnight lo 5
a m. Sunday.
ones awaiting pre-sentence invest!
gations. Trantham changed a pre
vious plea of innocence to guilty
Tuesday.
Probation Granted
Newman's wife, Connie Lee, and
Shirley Jean Courtney, both 19,
Monday were given two years each
in the Oregon State Penitentiary.
but were immediately placed on
probation.
In another criminal action before
Judge Woodrich Tuesday, Lester
John LaBonte, 28, formerly of
Glide, pleaded guilty to a grand
jury indictment charging forgery.
The judge sentenced him to five
years in the Oregon State Peniten
tiary. He was accused of signing
the name of Clifford Rainwater to
a check for $56 payable to Nancy
Howerton.
Japanese Governor
Thanks Oregonians
SALEM (AP) Kingo Machi
mura, governor of the Japanese
state of Hokkaido, Tuesday
thanked the people of Oregon for
a gift of Douglas Fir trees.
Machimura in a letter to Gov.
Mark Hatfield asked that the
thanks of Hokkaido's people be
sent the people of Oregon.
The trees were taken to Hok
kaido by Col. Robert T. Walker,
who was stationed there with the
U. S. Army.
"With Col Walker's extraordi
nary effort, they arrived here in
good condition together with the
rose bushes which were presented
to Mr. Yosaku Harada, the mayor
of Sapporo, by Mr. Terry Shrunk,
the mayor of Portland that is the
sister-city of Sapporo," the letter
said.
Mach mura said white pine in
troduced into Hokkaido from the
United States is growing well.
Former U.S. Treasurer
Honeymoons In Hawaii
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
Ivy Baker Priest, treasurer of
the United States from 1953 to
la61, and real estate broker Sidney
V. Stevens are flying to Honolulu
today for a 10-day honeymoon.
The pair, friends for 10 years,
were married Tuesday at a Bev
erly Hills hotel by Superior Court
Judge Mclntyre Faries in the
presence of 50 relatives and
friends.
Stevens, 58, of Beverly Hills,
had not been married previously.
The hride, who is 55, is the widow
of Roy Priest of Arlington, Va.
Four Killed In Ambush.
LISBON, Portugal (AP)-Threc
white farmers and an African
truck driver were killed from
ambush by rebels near Carmona
in the Portuguese West African
territory of Angola Tuesday, the
Lusitania News Agency reported.
It said troops rushed in and
killed several of the attackers.
Kir. HitrTA ii
I 1 J-'V '
Five Nearoes File First
Court Suit On Segregated Voting
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Five Negroes have filed what
a Georgia state official says is
probably the first federal court
suit in the nation against segre
gated polling places.
The .suit, filed Tuesday in U.S.
District Court at Albany, Ga.,
seeks desegregation of polling
places and voting lisU in Albany
and Dougherty County.
A deputy assistant state attor
ney - general who specializes in
segregation suits, Freeman Lev-
erett of hlberton. said he knew of
no such action filed in the past.
In other racial developments:
Nine "Freedom Riders" arrived
in Montgomery, Ala., but were
Kennedy Walks
Sans Crutches
WASHINGTON (AP) Presi
dent Kennedy walked without
crutches today as he escorted
distinguished guests to a White
House luncheon honoring visiting
Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda of
Japan.
The few steps Kennedy took in
the White House were the first
newsmen had seen him take with
out crutches since he flew to
Palm Beach, Fla., for a long
weekend of rest on June 8.
Kennedy also stood for two or
three minutes without the support
of crutches while photographers
snapped pictures of htm with Mrs
Kennedy, the prime minister and
Mrs. Ikeda and former President
and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower
Kennedy had walked without
crutches from the elevator that
carried him and the First Lady
with the Eisenhowers and the
Ikcdas from the President's top
floor living quarters.
Eisenhower and Kennedy had
been conferring for almost an
hour before they came down for
the luncheon. White House press
secretary Pierre Salinger said
they discussed a number of topics,
but did not identity them.
Ikeda joined Kennedy and Ei
senhower tor about 15 minutes.
Kennedy's movements without
crutches came a day ahead of
the prospects his aides had out
lined in their reports to newsmen
on the President's progress in re
covering from a strained back.
Dr. Janet Travel!, the While
House physician and two outside
sDeciausts in erthopedics ex
amined Kennedy and talked with
him for more than half an hour
late yesterday.
Boy On Bicycle Hurt
In Collision With Car
An 11-Vear-old Roseburg boy was
taken to a Roseburg hospital snort
lv after 7:30 p.m. Tuesday suffer
ing only minor injuries after the
bicycle he was riding collided with
an automobile.
James Robert Donnelly of 1335
SE Marsters Ave., reportedly told
investigating Roseburg officers he
had been passing through the inter
section of SE Hamilton St. and
Rice Ave. on his bicycle at a high
rate of speed when the accident
occurred. He stated he did not
see nor hear the car until struck
Charles Calvin Swales, 1539 SE
Kane St. was the driver of the
vehicle. Police did not issue a cita
tion. Injuries were listed for the boy
as a bump on his head and a
bruised left leg.
Riddle Woman Receives
Heart Fund Certificate
llrs. J. J. rnspisil, president of
the Auxiliary of Post 9744, V.F.W.,
Riddle, and team captain of the
February Heart Fund drive, has
received a personal certificate of
appreciation from the Oregon Heart
Fund association for work in the
drive. Gene Akers, Riddle chair
man for the drive, received a
like certificate for his work. Mrs.
Pospisil was informed by the as
sociation that Riddle Auxiliary Post
9744 will later receive a special
award for outstanding work in the
Heart Fund drive.
i
a TJi
ROSEBURG FUNERAL HOME
s Street!. Phone OR 3-4455
-rrr rn ai i
nnt nllnwori tn enter . the Grey
hound Bus depot where officers
,ra invoctioalinff an BnonVmOUS
bomb threat. A spokesman said
the biracial group would spena
the night in Negro homes in the
llihsm, nanital and continue tu
Jackson, Miss., by bus some time
today.
Fourteen Freedom Riders left
Now nrlnanc hv train to complete
their trip from Berkeley, Calif.,
to Jackson, vowing to integrate
the Mississippi capital's train ter
minal or be jailed, wnea tney
,.ohH .IaWnn the It white Der-
sons and 3 Negroes were arrested
on breach of peace charges and
convicted, bringing to 131 the
number convicted since anti-segregation
attempts began May 24.
Sheriff J. R. Gilfoy said Free
dom Riders at Mississippi's State
Penitentiary were not treated like
felons as charged by an official
of the Congress ot itactai equal
ity. '
At Unmnhic Tenn . SfiVBn
young Negroes arcested when
they took seals at an Assemoiy
of God youth rally were fined
S2O0 each on charges of interfer
ing with public worship.
The operators ol rountaine
Ferry Park at Louisville, Ky., ob
lainoA a pnnrt order to restrict
pro-integration picketing at the
privately owned amusement par.
The president ot Georgia teen
in Atlanta, pointing to a longtime
niiiv rofneerf tn exnlain to nine
Negroes why the college rejected
their applications lor aamission.
Presbyterians Meet
Near Klamath Falls
The largest annual Oregon
Prcsbvterian Church Conference
held so far took place recently at
Camp Mclaughlin at Lake of the
Woods. Klamath Falls. Eighty sev
en young people and 18 counselors
attended.
The camp was under the leader
ship of the Rev. John Reynolds,
Westminster Church, Medford. His
assistant was the Rev. King
Jones, First Presbyterian Church,
Jacksonville.
Morning devotions were led by
the Rev. Robert Olsmstead of the
First Presbyterian Church of Cen
tral Point.
Seven different classes were
taught by ministers from Klamath
Falls, Grants Pass, North Bend,
Tulelake, Calif., Roseburg and
Medford. The Rev. John Adams
of Roseburg conducted one of the
classes.
The evening's activities included
skits, a film on "The Life of
Christ," and a campfire vespers
program.
Attending from Roseburg were
the Rev. Mr. Adams, Ginger An
del son, Kaye Beery, Lynda Cum
mins, Marilyn Fisher, Sue Gum
Martha Hedrick, Paula Gcddes
John Haldiman and Gary Johnson,
Three Boys Being Held
In Alleged Car Theft
Three boys are being held in
Medford in connection with an al
leged theft of a Roseburg man's
automobile.
According to a Roseburg Citv Po
lice report, the boys were appre
hended driving a vehicle registered
to James W. Stewart of 1873 SW
River St., Roseburg.
Upon contacting Stewart, officers
were informed he had parked the
vehicle about 6 a.m. Tuesday in
front of his place of employment.
Stewart was away from the office
when the alleged theft took place.
Police also stale one of the ju
veniles admitted abandoning anoth
er vehicle, stqjen in Portland, on
Highway 99 just north of Roseburg
earlier that morning.
Police did not have details per
taining to the boys' arrest.
I
Savings & Loan Association
Jockion & Oak
Federal
Tech has admitted three Negroes
for the fall quarter.
The County Board of Education
at Dunn, N.C., voted to admit 2u
fnriinn nuniU in the whitp hiok
school, but refused to allow 2'
Indian children to enter the whits
elementary school.
A negro woman at Riverdale,
Utah, Mrs. James H. Gillespie,
said she and her family wilt move
into their new ia,uuu nome in a
whitp neighborhood even thoiu'it
someone smeared the house wilb.
tar. Some negroes live, in a hous.
ing development adjacent to the
neighborhood.
Boivin Undecided
On Congress Race
SALEM (AP) Senate President
Harry Boivin, in Salem to act as
governor when Gov. Mark Hat
field goes to Hawaii this weekend;
said today he is being urged to
fun for Congress.
The Klamath Falls Democrat
said that the support has been
widely spread throughout Oregon's
2nd Congressional District, which
covers 18 Eastern Oregon coun
ties.
Boivin, a conservative, said1 he
has not come to any decision, but
is considering candidacy, lie
would have to run in the primary
against Rep. Al Uilman, the Dem
ocratic incumbent.
Boivin said in the past he has
laughed off attempts to get him
to run because they have been
mostly from Klamath County.
"The urgings are widespread
throughout the Eastern Oregon
counties," Boivin said. "I'm not
laughing it off.
Boivin led the conservative wing
of the Democratic party to the
Senate leadership at the last state
legislature over the opposition of
party machinery.
Boivin won me senate presi
dency in a contest with the liberal
Democrats in the Senate led by
Sen. Alfred Corbett, D-Portland,
and Sen. Robert Straub, D
Eugene, the state party chairman.
Boivin won that race with the
support of Republicans in the Sen
ate. Boivin will be acting governor
this weekend while Hatfield at
tends the national governors con
ference in Hawaii.
Acting Police Chief
Asks Driver Alertness
Acting Chief of Police Bert Eat
on today asked Roseburg area
drivers to be doubly alert for chil
dren playing in or near streets
now that schools are dismissed for
the summer.
Youngsters are especially inter
ested in having fun in the first
few weeks school is out, Eaton
said.
Consequently, it's up lo each
driver to be careful and drive at
speeds which will permit time to
stop to avoid accidents, he said.
Eaton unrrd caution in rural
areas where children are working
in fields and where they are pick
ed up or discharged from busses
or trucks ca the way to and tost
work.
Local Paper Carriers
Take Disneyland Trip
Carriers from Roseburg and Win
ston were among those recently
completing a five-day trip to Dis
neyland. They are employes of The
Oregonian.
They were Don Blake, Ted El
liott, John Hebaid, 'Norman
Thorpe, and David Brower, all ot
P.oseburg, and Lee Borgaes of Win
ston. They toured Disneyland, New
port Beach, and Marineland, part
of 375 boys . from the state out
side Portland.
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